Los Angeles Times

Lawsuit filed over wildfire in Greece

Relatives of two victims accuse officials of negligent manslaught­er.

- Associated press

ATHENS — The relatives of two people killed by Greece’s deadliest wildfire in decades filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Greek officials for their response to the disaster, accusing them of negligent manslaught­er and felony counts of exposing people to danger.

The victims, teachers who were 70 and 73 years old, were trapped by flames as they attempted to flee their homes in Neos Voutzas, a seaside neighborho­od near Mati, a resort area near Athens that was hit hardest in the wildfire. Their burned bodies were found a day later.

About 90 people are believed to have died in the July 23 wildfire that, fanned by gale-force winds, decimated Greek seaside resort areas. A final death toll is pending as coroners work to identify the remains.

The fire department, which has been issuing the official death toll, said Wednesday night that the bodies of 81 people had been identified. Four more fire victims died in a hospital, and one person remained unaccounte­d for, it said.

The wife and daughter of the 70-year-old man and the son of the 73-year-old woman filed their lawsuit against Greece’s civil protection general secretary, the regional governor, a mayor and several officials in the regional civil protection office and in the fire and police department­s.

The lawsuit says the man tried to flee but couldn’t open the door to his garage because the electricit­y had failed. He and the woman, who was his tenant, then apparently tried to escape on foot. Their bodies were found about 300 to 400 yards from their building.

Separately, the government said it would move ahead with the demolition of illegally constructe­d buildings in woodland and coastal areas. Officials have blamed illegal constructi­on, among other factors, for contributi­ng to the high death toll in Mati, where there are many narrow, dead-end streets.

Several areas around Athens initially developed without building permits. Successive government­s allowed unauthoriz­ed dwellings and buildings to connect to utilities if the owners paid fines and, more recently, property taxes.

Environmen­t Minister Giorgos Stathakis said during a news conference Wednesday that there were 2,500 illegally constructe­d buildings in woodland areas and 700 on beaches in the wider Athens area.

Asked specifical­ly about the fire-devastated Mati area, he said only “about 50%” of the buildings there were legal.

Also Wednesday, authoritie­s arrested a 35-year-old man on suspicion of intentiona­lly setting five fires in the countrysid­e around Marathon, north of Mati, none of which was related to the Mati fire.

The five blazes, which broke out between July 26 and Tuesday, were all safely extinguish­ed. The suspect was to be formally charged with arson, the fire service said.

Authoritie­s are still investigat­ing what caused the deadly Mati fire. Although officials had initially said that arson was suspected, there is increasing suspicion the blaze might have been caused by negligence.

 ?? Yorgos Karahalis Associated Press ?? THE GREEK seaside neighborho­od of Neos Voutzas is a moonscape the day after the July 23 wildfire. About 90 people are believed to have died in the blaze.
Yorgos Karahalis Associated Press THE GREEK seaside neighborho­od of Neos Voutzas is a moonscape the day after the July 23 wildfire. About 90 people are believed to have died in the blaze.

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